NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Dynamic Characterization of Galfenol (Fe81.6Ga18.4)Galfenol has the potential to transform the smart materials industry by allowing for the development of multifunctional, load-bearing devices. One of the primary technical challenges faced by this development is the very limited experimental data on Galfenol's frequency-dependent response to dynamic stress, which is critically important for the design of such devices. This report details a novel and precise characterization of the constitutive behavior of polycrystalline Galfenol (Fe81.6Ga18.4) under quasi-static (1 Hz) and dynamic (4 to 1000 Hz) stress loadings. Mechanical loads are applied using a high-frequency load frame. Quasi-static minor and major hysteresis loop measurements of magnetic flux density and strain are presented for constant electromagnet currents (0 to 1.1 A) and constant magnetic fields 0 to 14 kA/m (0 to 180 Oe). The dynamic stress amplitude for minor and major loops is 2.88 and 31.4 MPa (418 and 4550 psi), respectively. Quasi-static material properties closely match published values for similar Galfenol materials. Quasi-static actuation responses are also measured and compared to quasi-static sensing responses; the high degree of reversibility seen in the comparison is consistent with published measurements and modeling results. Dynamic major and minor loops are measured for dynamic stresses up to 31 MPa (4496 psi) and 1 kHz, and the bias condition resulting in maximum, quasi-static sensitivity. Eddy current effects are quantified by considering solid and laminated Galfenol rods. Three key sources of error in the dynamic measurements are accounted for: (1) electromagnetic noise in strain signals due to Galfenol's magnetic response, (2) error in load signals due to the inertial force of fixturing, and (3) phase misalignment between signals due to conditioning electronics. For dynamic characterization, strain error is kept below 1.2 percent of full scale by wiring two collocated gauges in series (noise cancellation) and through leadwire weaving. Inertial force error is kept below 0.41 percent by measuring the dynamic force in the specimen using a nearly collocated piezoelectric load washer. The phase response of all conditioning electronics is explicitly measured and corrected for. In general, as frequency is increased, the sensing response becomes more linear because of an increase in eddy currents. As frequency increases above approximately 100 Hz, the elbow in the strain-versus-stress response disappears as the active (soft) regime stiffens toward the passive (hard) regime. Under constant-field conditions, the loss factors of the solid rod peak between 200 and 600 Hz, rather than exhibiting a monotonic increase. Compared to the solid rod, the laminated rod exhibits much slower increases in hysteresis with frequency, and its quasi-static behavior extends to higher frequencies. The elastic modulus of the laminated rod decreases between 100 and 300 Hz; this trend is currently unexplained.
Document ID
20160007563
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Technical Publication (TP)
Authors
Scheidler, Justin J.
(Ohio State Univ. Columbus, OH, United States)
Asnani, Vivake M.
(NASA Glenn Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Dapino, Marcelo J.
(Ohio State Univ. Columbus, OH, United States)
Date Acquired
June 15, 2016
Publication Date
June 1, 2016
Subject Category
Structural Mechanics
Mechanical Engineering
Engineering (General)
Report/Patent Number
NASA/TP-2016-218754
E-19082
GRC-E-DAA-TN22679
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 533127.02.93.03.13.28
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX14AE24H
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNC14IA07I
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
Dynamic sensing
Characterization
Vibration
Magnetostrictive
Galfenol
No Preview Available